THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, APRIL 29 ,1964 I T~lEMICHGANDAIL FRIAYAPRI 2977-6 Future Easing World Problems { I Medical School Lectures OPENS TUESDAY: On Closed-Circuit-TV New York Actors To Appear ( ning of the policy of containment from 1947 and said that the same basic policy has been continued through the present. Policy Established "In spite of the Republicans' talk of a more positive policy," he said, "they followed in the main, a path which was already well established and had existed when President Eisenhower's Adminis- tration took office." With the exception of the "dis- asterous results of the civil war in China." the policy of "contain- ment" has succeeded in maintain- ing the original status of countries against Communist aggression, Prof. Dulles said. However, he pointed out, this policy has not led to any easing of the situation as regards the basic conflict between the West and Communism. But the future should see some development beginning to ease this tension, Prof. Dulles said, though perhaps it will be only "some small beginning, not so significant in itself, but pointing the way along lines that will become more significant." Prof. Dulles will lead a dis- cussion on "What Europeans Think of American Foreign Pol- icy" at 4:15 p.m. today in the Vandenburg Room of the League. The discussion is intended pri- marily for honors students, but is open to anyone wishing to attend. By PETER STEINBERGER A curiosity until a few years ago, teaching via closed-circuit television is now in full swing at the medical school. A professionally equipped studio run by the blue-jecketed staff of the University's television office, regularly broadcasts in color and black-and-white to audiences of several hundred people. One of the 18 schools through- out the country that have oper- ational television equipment, the University's facilities, installed in 1958, are matched only by the army's Walter Reed Hospital. Highlight of the University Hos- pital's $180,000 system is an over- head color camera in a third floor operating room, which is operated by remote control from the con-. trol room downstairs. Unobtrusive Unobtrusive during surgery, it automatically follows the lights as the surgeon moves them, thus keeping the various areas of the operation within its field of view,, while its three lenses permit wide- angle shots of large surfaces, or close-ups of a finger tip. Funds for the equipment were granted by the Dow Foundation of Midland, Mich. The cost of air- conditioning, paid for by the Uni- versity, brought total costs to $250,000. Air conditioning is nec- essary because temperatures over V VVV V ... ........ WV WV - VVVVV V V WV VVV V V WVV ... V V - WV I (V)~ it0 -~ IJnuA~? I U U' U"N U' The Ann Arbor alumnae clubI of Pi Beta Phi sorority will observe Founder's Day with a luncheon at 12:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Union. Mrs. Carl Morse, Epsilon prov- ince president, will speak on the sorority's founders, and Mrs. Robert Tefft will speak on "Writ-1 ing for Young People." Alumnae and collegiate mem- bers of Phi Mu sorority will gather in Ann Arbor for a State Day convention at 11 a.m. tomorrow at 1541 Washtenaw. At 1 p.m. lunch-. eon will be served in the Anderson Room of the Union. The principle speaker will be Prof. James M. Davis, president of the National Association of Foreign Student Advisors and di- rector of the International Center. Mrs. Landon Fraber, Mrs. J. F. Bennett, and Mrs. Clifford Herold will also address the group. "Enchanted Escapade" will be the title of the spring dance for Adams and Allen-Rumsey Houses. The dance will be held from 9-12 p.m. tomorrow in the second floor. dining rooms of West Quadrangle. The dance is open to men of both houses, their dates, and in- vited guests, and will feature the Don Schetter band. A gambling casino from Reno will be an added attraction. * S * Kappa Delta sorority will hold their pledge formal at 6 p.m. today at the Washtenaw Country Club. Entitled "Moonlight Mas- querade," the dance will feature the Kingsmen Band. 82 degrees cause color distortion. Programs originate either in the, operating room (for live surgery) or in the second floor studio. M a n y lectures, demonstrations and animal experiments are car- ried by the studio's black-and- white and color cameras to the amphitheatre adjoining it, which seats 200. Image Shown Here a projector throws the image onto a six-by-eight foot screen. Other rooms and auditor- ium provided with reception facilities boost total potential aud- ience for any program to several thousands. Due to the excellent cameras and the lack of air-borne trans- mission difficulties, picture quali- ty is much better than in home color sets. Every student can see even small details, regardless of his seat in the amphitheatre, and the time saved by showing lectur- er. demonstration and film at one class meeting instead of several is invaluable. A medical school committee headed by Dr. Harry Towsley, professor of pediatrics, supervisesj budget and policy, which Dr.1 Richard Judge is programming coordinator. Hazen Schumacher of the Broadcasting Service is in charge of technical matters. Boons Provided One of the major boons pro- vided by television teaching has been in the field of psychology. Patients were formerly interview- ed in front of 200 students, which didn't provide much in the way of privacy. Today, the relative privacy of a television camera makes subjects far more respons- ive and natural. The use of two or more cameras permits operating room shots tot alternate with X-rays or other data. Also, electrocardiagram data may be superimposed upon the operating room picture to show the immediate effects of various procedures.l The most important advantage of the viewing system, however, lies in its magnification of details which could previously be seen only by surgeons, and not always by them. Professional Equipment Although so far all programs have been closed - circuit, the' equipment is of professional cal-1 ibre and could be used for broad- casting over local stations or na- tional networks. Other possibilities include scrambled image broad-' casting, which could be picked up' by special receivers with decoding mechanisms, and coaxial cables connecting the 'U' with hospitals throughout the state. The biggest flaw right now is the lack of a means to record pro-I grams, either on tape or film. If such apparatus were available lectures and operations by the na- tion's greatest doctors could be preserved for future study. Facilities Available The television facilities arei available to all departments of4 the medical school, but so far only 15-20 percent of the faculty has; made use of them. As a result, the* equipment is unused a good deall of the time. Meanwhile the uses of television as a teaching aid are1 slowly being established.- While up to now television has been used only for teaching,; future uses will include the mon- itoring of complex experimentsI from a central point, and inter- com systems to supplement hos-I pital visiting hours. Also, patients in psychiatric wards could be ob- served for long periods of time by hidden cameras, revealing sig-l nificant trends in their behavior. Funds Raised At Minhiginas Students and citizens of Ann' Arbor spent a total of $41 thou- sand at Michigras last weekend, sponsors of the show announced yesterday. Some 20 thousand people helped the biennial carnival raise funds to donate to childrens' charities. After profits have been figured, the sponsors of Michigras, the Union and the WAA, plan contri- butions to The Children's Fund for Leukemia, the National Mul-' tiple Sclerosis Society, the Uni- versity Fresh Air Club, and the Muscular Distrophy Associations of America. Since 1937, Michigras has given over $50 thousand to various char- ities. MONICA LOVETT ... in drama season Maize-Blue Competitors Sell Tickets By LYNNE FRIEDMAN Maize-Blue Activities for Frosh Weekend are reaching a high point this week, both in number and variety. Both teams have revealed their secret themes, ticket sales have begun, and the finishing touches are being put on preparations for the Frosh Weekend Dance, to be held at 8:30 p.m. Saturday, in the League Ballroom. The Blue Team picketed on the Diag to advocate that Abluevia, Little BluedBoo's native land, be made the fifty-first state. The decision to picket was the result of a meeting of the Abluvian diplo- mats in the Diag trees last week. The Blue Team tickets to the Frosh Weekend Dance feature Lit- tle Blue Boo standing on an out- line of the state of Abluevia. The Blue ticket stand on the Diag is a polling booth; one votes to admit Abluevia into the Union by pur- chasing a ticket. The tickets' which cost $1.50, also are being sold at the Undergraduate Library and on the Hill. Other Blue Team activities in- clude wearing of "Go Blue" but- tons and having Abluevian license plates on bicycles. The Maize Team has also been avidly publicizing Frosh Weekend. The Maize Team tickets, in the form of a lace-trimmed maize parasol with a be-ribboned pipe- cleaner handle are being sold un- der a larger parasol on the south side of the Diag, as well as in front of the Undergraduate Library and on the Hill. Tickets to the all- campus, girl-bid dance cost $1.50. Early in the morning on Mon- day, "The South Will Rise Again Day," the Maize Team decorated the Diag with "lines" of crepe paper and placed the "M" into a bell, in honor of the Maize 'n Dix- on Line and Maisey Belle, a typical Southern girl. The floorshows of both the Maize and the Blue Teams enter- tained this week at Mercywood, a home for the mentally disturbed. After performing the skit which will be shown in full costume this Saturday night, the teams led the patients in community singing. f In Ann Arbor Drama Season U By ROLYN McMILLAN Leading New York character actors Dorothy Sands, Stephen Elliott, Ethel Britton and Edna Preston have been signed for sup- porting roles with the Ann Arbor Drama Season. Monica Lovett, Robert Carra- way and Mickey Deems, members of the original. Broadway cast of "The Golden Fleecing," will re- create their roles locally. One of the theatre's best known character actresses, Dorothy Sands played the role of Helen Hayes in the Broadway production of "Time Remembered" last sea- son. She has also recently been seen with the Lunts in "Quadrille," with Rosalind Russell in "Bell, Book, and Candle," and with Eva LeGallienne in "Mary Stuart." Elliott appeared on Broadway this season in "Roman Candle." Miss Britton played in Harvey for five years in New York, and has since toured with Edward G. Rob- inson in "Middle of the Night" and with Gloria Swanson in "Red Letter Day." Drama Season will begin its 25th anniversary on Tuesday, May 10 with Ann B. Davis (TV's "Schultzy") in "Happy Birthday." The Season will include David Wayne in "The Golden Fleecing," Kim Hunter and Charles Hohman in "Dark at the Top of the Stairs," Robert Q. Lewis in "The Gazebo," and Dana Andrews in "Two for the Seasaw." STEPHAN ELI. OTT supporting role Editor Keller to Lecture, Allan Keller, assistant city edi- tor of the New York World Tele- gram and Sun and professor of journalism at Columbia University will speak on "The Power and the Glory of the Written Word" at 10 a.m. today in the Rackham Lecture Hall. music SHOPS --CAMPUS- 211 S. State NO 8-9013 -DOWNTOWN-- 205 E. Liberty NO 2-0675 I i .. STARTING TODAY Shows at 7-9 P.M. b DIAL NO 8-6415 Continuous From 1 P.M. both Saturday and Sunday II I dcn'44 Campuo I CIZ Kx" A*z TONIGHT at 7:00 P.M. and 9:00 P.M. "MISTER RO BERTS" y. T' .9' T' .9' T9 Ty' T, T9 T9 '9' T9 4' Ty' ' .9' y9' 4K T9y T9 T, y, -9' .9' T9 I 4' .Ty T9 .9' T9 Petitioning for offices in the Women's League during the sum- mer school is now open. The positions available are president, social chairman, chair- man and two members of Wom- en's Judiciary Council and public relations chairman. Interested applicants may ob- tain petition forms in the under- graduate office of the League. * * * Seeks Election .. . George H. Stevens, research physician for a Detroit pharma- ceutical house, announced yester- day that he would seek election in June to the Ann Arbor Board of Education. Stevens received his BS degree in pre-medical sciences from Mor-' avian College in 1943. Upon dis- charge from the Navy, he entered Temple University medical school, where he received his MD degree Hehas previously served as an instructor in neurology, and was chief of the neurology section at the Albany Veterans Administra- tion Hospital. * * * Obtain Petitions .. . Petitioning for the Burocat ad- vistory board is now open to all women who will be sophomores at the University next fall. Burocats is an organization de- signed to introduce freshman women to the activities and func tioning of the Women's League. Petitions for any of the five available positions can be obtained in the League Undergraduate Of- fice. Petitioning will close on May 4, and interviewing will extend from May 4 to May 6. a. i-" N "CERTAINLY ONE OF THE MOST VICOROUSLY CREATIVE !FILM TALENTS OF OUR DAVI" "NEVER LETS UP IN ITS TENSION, which being disctlwVly Bergman is a blend of an ilosephy, mud stinging drin. -N. YIVRAD tIII "Sensationally reulist. Bergman presents a childbirth scene that will probably make you dig your fingernails intoyer poIns or pre -I a ctI sweet, e * "ta :.o n wIom u11oe .1.. .M EOtEIG~M;' 2t - THE PROMETHEAN OPEN DAILY at 2 P.M. Entertainment Nightly Dial NO 5-6290 STARTING TODAY "A VERY PERFECT WORK! I'ecaC ir P Dst "NOT TO BE MISSED!" Herald-Tribune "VIVID, CRACKLING A ACTION!" JONUwN W orld-Tele. JN A ALL THAT IS UNCONQUERABLE Musiccompos warEm i A iy - by DIMIT S THE EST!" Mirror ed and conducted RI TIOMKIN V